Rae Reich
-
Posts
1,247 -
Joined
-
Last visited
Reputation Activity
-
Rae Reich reacted to Bernardita Cossio in Warped rims on my porcelain sculptures
Hi everyone!
I have been struggling with warping rims on my porcelain pieces. I was wondering if you could give me some advice on this matter. To provide some context, I make porcelain pieces using handmade leather molds. The challenge I am facing is keeping the rim in a circular shape, as it warps during the glaze firing process. I am considering firing the pieces at cone 6 to minimize the warping. However, I am also concerned that firing them upside down could cause the body's weight to bend the walls.
Do you have any suggestions or methods I could use to avoid this issue?
-
Rae Reich reacted to Callie Beller Diesel in 240G clay cracking in the glaze firing
Hi and welcome! I wish it was under better circumstances.
The pictures are worth a thousand words, and thank you so much for including those!
The fact that the piece is broken so cleanly, and in 2 near-perfect vertical lines all the way through means that this wasn’t specifically your clay, or anything you did during building the piece. It’s a nice dense clay that probably stuck to the kiln shelf due to the mass and size of the piece, and cracked during cooling. For the next pieces, I’d fire them on some sand/alumina so that the piece has the equivalent of little refractory ball bearings to shift around on. You could also use a waster slab that will shrink at the same rate as the piece, but take the brunt of the force and absorb the crack instead.
If the clay survived the bisque just fine, another possibility is to not fire the piece to full clay maturity. Porosity in the end piece is less of a concern for you than it would be for someone throwing functional ware.
-
Rae Reich reacted to Callie Beller Diesel in Obvara in same firing as raku
So I’m going to preface this by saying I’ve never fired Obvara, and I’ve only ever fired raku by eyeball, never with cones or thermocouple. (Please do this with proper eye protection). So I couldn’t tell you what temperature exactly I was using, but the glaze recipes used were mostly gerstley borate at the time, and that melts between 1550 and 1600 F.
So my question is, can you fire the raku pieces to a lower temp to match the Obvara recommendations, or are you using glazes that really don’t mature until that hotter temp?
If you do need the hotter temp for raku, it’s possible to roughly judge the temp of a piece by the colour of the glow coming off it. The chart linked below has a nice colour gradient illustration, and you can do a bit of a comparison from there. There’s a paywall, but you can use one of your 3 free articles/month to view it.
https://ceramicartsnetwork.org/ceramic-recipes/recipe/Kiln-Firing-Chart-142658
-
Rae Reich reacted to Ryleigh in Broken belt on wheel ruining work
I don’t mind making mistakes because that’s where you learn, but man is it frustrating when the changes don’t help! (Especially when you have people waiting on you.) I haven’t notice any kind of change in sound with the wheel which is why I assumed it was my doing even though my throwing was fine till it suddenly wasn’t. I just ordered the new belts so hopefully they’re in soon and I can give you an update. Thank you for responding and the reassurance! There is always room for improvement, indeed!
-
Rae Reich reacted to Hulk in Broken belt on wheel ruining work
Good question!
I'm in my seventh year of throwing*.
The sessions when most (or all) goes into the recycle bin (else dried a bit and then wedged up to re-throw) still occur - not as often tho'.
The belts slipping could be throwing your throwing off!
While waiting for your new belts, can you tell if there's slippage?
The motor noise changes as you throttle the pedal - does the sound change without throttling? ...as drag on the wheel increases, does the motor rev?
Hope it turns around for you, please do post updates.
*At a hobby level, serious hobby, but not anything like full time.
There's still improvement! Just recently I feel, think, and believe that I'm almost back where I was before injury and moving put a hold on my progress.
There's plenty of room for improvements...
-
Rae Reich reacted to Callie Beller Diesel in Glazing right before Raku firing?
I first got hooked on clay because we did raku at my high school. The only time we had anything explode was the one time we tried firing a piece that wasn’t bisqued first.
-
Rae Reich reacted to Callie Beller Diesel in slab plates center warping during glaze fire
I’ve seen this form a bunch, and yeah, it’s tricky to get right. One solution for the warping I saw another potter online do was to do all the minimal trimming and cleanup as you describe, but they then added a slip trailed circle of clay as a foot rim. It was just enough to keep the full surface of the plate’s bottom from being in direct contact with the kiln shelf so you don’t get the warping, but still keeps the same aesthetic qualities of this style.
Results may vary with different clay bodies, but it’s something that’s worth a shot.
-
Rae Reich reacted to Min in slab plates center warping during glaze fire
I'm seeing a lot of plates made like this these days, it's a good way to make a plate with this type of design. I've got one bisque fired as a test but haven't got it glazed yet, it was really fast to make and I also like that it doesn't require any trimming. That nearly vertical edge is going to help prevent sagging/warping during the glaze fire compared to a flatter more horizontal rim.
I would suggest putting one of yours in a glaze firing with no glaze on it, if it doesn't warp then it would suggest the glaze fit could be the problem.
Welcome to the Forum.
-
Rae Reich reacted to Mark C. in slab plates center warping during glaze fire
I make square slab plates on a plaster slump molds . they are not footed (no coils added). They pop off the plaster well and have a curve to them which lessens in the glazze fire. They have a square area that is flat in about 1/3 of the form with the lip angled up. I have to sizes and have way better luck with the smaller 8-9 inch than the larger 14-12 inch which loves to lay down to much in a glaze fire
-
Rae Reich reacted to neilestrick in slab plates center warping during glaze fire
Not everyone wants to or is able to throw dinner plates on the wheel. I slab build my plates, and it is much faster than throwing and I don't have problems with humping in the middle.
@chris123 I think the issue is either with glaze tension as mentioned above, or it could be from uneven heating/cooling between the edges and the center or the top and bottom.
1. Does it happen with all of your glazes or just one?
2. What size kiln do you have, and what firing schedule are you using?
-
Rae Reich reacted to Pres in slab plates center warping during glaze fire
Tried this years ago, and found it was indeed easier to just throw them. I tried mine throwing the flattened slab on a plaster form with a flat bottom and the sides shaped for a plate. while shaping it I threw the foot ring. Alas 2-3 out of 10 would warp. I decided it was because of the shaping of the form while on the wheel would cause particles to become circular in motion as opposed to the center being non aligned from the rolling out. Just my thinking at the time, but now I throw much faster plates using large slightly curved ribs.
best,
Pres
-
Rae Reich reacted to Mark C. in slab plates center warping during glaze fire
For me throwing the whokle thing on the wheel is faster by far. The time is trimming a foot.The wares are solid and do not warp. The compression is good and no memory issues with the clay .
-
Rae Reich reacted to Piedmont Pottery in slab plates center warping during glaze fire
For me it would be faster to just throw the plates on the wheel from the start rather than using the slab roller. However, I do find that a foot ring adds stability to plates during firing. Have you considered using a slump mold instead of throwing the slabs?
-
Rae Reich reacted to Hulk in What is this pottery wheel
Hi Mia00,
Welcome to the Forum!
I'm not finding anything on Email pottery wheels in general, let alone the particular Type and Catalog spec (which I'm not able to read) stamped on your ID plate.
If the motor, speed controls, drive mechanism (are there pulleys and belt(s)?), wheel head shaft, bearings, et cetera, are in good shape (else can be refurbished/repaired), perhaps you can use the damaged/swollen parts as templates for replacements?
Email Industries in New Zealand was involved with metals (particularly pipeline and plating), appliances, building and industrial products, and more ...interesting! The "Email" moniker is/was an acronym of Electric Meter and Allied Industries, coined in 1951, well before widespread use of Electronic Mail.
Email sold items branded Westinghouse, Kelvinator, Simpson, Chef (and others) under license from overseas companies...
-
Rae Reich reacted to Pres in microtips
When pulling mugs or cups or any cylindrical piece off of the hump make a pancake larger than the defined bottom of the piece then draw up the sides to form the walls of the pot. This keeps the alignment of clay particles even as opposed to pulling the walls up as in a normal piece thrown off of the wheel head or bat. The difference is that you are unable to compress the floor of the pot sufficiently off the hump leading to unaligned particles where the wall meets the floor,
best,
Pres
-
Rae Reich reacted to Denice in What’s on your workbench?
Test tiles didn't work out but I have another slip idea rattling around in my head. I decided to take a break and make new address plagues for my mailbox, I made the original ones 5 years ago but someone decide to break them up with a tire iron. I had made a press mold for the plague so the only thing that will require some skill is the decorative glaze work. Living on a rural road you have teenagers drive by mailboxes and hit them with a baseball bat or run over them. Denice
-
Rae Reich reacted to Mark C. in What’s on your workbench?
I threw my first pots yesterday after a 8. week break. I had a tarsal tunnel surgery on right foot and out of cast now and in a boot for a month. I got off crutches and knee scooter about 4 days ago and am taking baby steps towards walking again. Going to make some small stuff this am as well. Slowly getting back to it. Lots of PT and doing my PT 3 times a day then ICE and infrared light. Compression sleeve 99% on time as well . Wound is about 5 inchs long and coming along nicely. This surgery was a real setback for 8 weeks.
I have a large order to fill this spring and am just starting to get to it. I will be driving my self again within a day-ya hoo
PS tarsel tunnel is just like carpel tunnel on wrist only on the foot. Both by feet have it. I shosse the worst right foot to do this year -if it gets better in 3-6 months I will conside the other one. Right now that sound really like a bad idea but once I;m healed up and if it works then I will think more about it on other foot.Surgery was a 4 hour trip away one way. Specialized doctor for this type of surgery of course.
-
Rae Reich reacted to Hulk in microtips
Here I'm using side light whilst touching up right after glaze (dipping, upside down).
Light from the side casts shadow in the/any tiny holes*!
There's a spot to touch up, center (almost) in the image above.
I've an old desk lamp set in the roll around stand, that's the lamp's metal shade on the left.
There's another spot, same mug.
These little holes might just close up during firing, ooorrr maybe not.
Easy enough to put a drop of glaze on the spot with a small brush, then, when the drop is still wet but the edges of it have lost sheen, smooth with a damp finger, but check later to ensure the hole hasn't persisted!
Recent thread(s) about tiny holes, I'd forgotten about application issues, like this, where a bubble forms during glazing.
In my quests against glaze defects, inspecting the damp glaze, and rechecking once thoroughly dry seems to help!
*I'd learned to drag a droplight around with me while looking for defects when I worked as a house painter; the side light really helps.
At this point, I'm working with "sunglasses" on all the time, early cataracts. ...also, I don't wear the latest prescription in the Studio.
-
Rae Reich reacted to Mark C. in Gold Luster
Luster needs the same temp every time .(so as noted above ,cone 019 is that temp no matter what) Refiring can be improve or not-it just that way-try and see.
-
-
Rae Reich got a reaction from Reza Hosseiny in Gold Luster
Lusters are tricky because they are so sensitive to firing temperatures and each subsequent firing has to be just a little bit lower than the last to prevent burning off previous work.
Refire the piece to a bit higher than the first gold firing to burn it off and start fresh.
-
Rae Reich reacted to Mark C. in Gold Luster
I think its best to fire off the old imperfections 1st than start over especially if its rough surface. Luster need a smooth shiny glaze to work well on top of.
-
Rae Reich reacted to Roberta12 in slab plates center warping during glaze fire
@chris123 When I dry my slab plates and trays, I put a bag of rice in the middle of them while they are drying. I do this with porcelain and stoneware. It's just one of the small things a potter can do to try to insure a measure of success. Along with maybe changing glazing or how you fire or or or....
What clay are you using and what temp do you bisque and fire to?
Also, just a thought, "toss it on the wheel" going with clay has a memory situation, maybe carefully put the clay slab on the bat?
-
Rae Reich reacted to Kelly in AK in slab plates center warping during glaze fire
That’s a very cool way to make a plate!
Are the bottoms glazed? If not, it could be the glaze causing it. Glaze with a tightly compressive fit will bow a flat test tile glazed on one side. It would be magnified on a thin plate.
-
Rae Reich reacted to Denice in What’s on your workbench?
Loading my test kiln tomorrow with my red calico clay and slip test. My husband is still down and out, thought is was a bad cold. Now he has no energy or spark, I think it might have been Covid. Suppose to be warm tomorrow great day to be in the studio. Denice